The Peterborough Examiner

Canada launching retaliator­y tariffs

From toilet paper to ketchup, Canada imposes $16.6 billion in counter-tariffs

- MIKE BLANCHFIEL­D AND ANDY BLATCHFORD

OTTAWA — When Sen. Patrick Toomey looks at the future of the ketchup market in his home state of Pennsylvan­ia, he sees real blood on the floor.

On Sunday, Canada’s $16.6billion worth of retaliator­y tariffs on dozens of U.S. products is set to kick in — the country’s answer to the crushing steel and aluminum tariffs imposed by the Trump administra­tion.

Ketchup is on Canada’s hit list, and that has Toomey worried because Kraft Heinz is headquarte­red in Pennsylvan­ia. Four years after the company shuttered its operation in Leamington, Ont., killing 750 Canadian jobs, Toomey — a Republican — fears the doors closing to workers in his state.

“We’re seeing the threat to their jobs,” Toomey told U.S. Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross during his recent testimony before the Senate.

“I’m really concerned about the retaliatio­n, which hasn’t even really started to hit us yet. But it’s going to hit the people who make Kraft and Heinz products.”

The impact of Canada’s reprisal will hit far and wide — beyond ketchup, beyond Pennsylvan­ia, beyond its Rust Belt neighbours to other Trump-friendly Republican states in the Midwest and the south, according to an analysis of U.S. northbound exports by The Canadian Press.

Canadian duties will leave dents on Democratic states, such as New York, Washington and Illinois, say federal government numbers based on data obtained from Statistics Canada and the U.S. Census Bureau.

Shortly after Trump announced the tariffs, the Trudeau government threatened to levy a 10 per cent surtax on dozens and dozens of U.S. consumer goods — unless the U.S. backed down.

Washington has shown no signs of budging, so the Canadian retaliatio­n is set to begin Sunday. Prime Minister Justin Trudeau will mark Canada’s birthday with visits to

a big steel refiner in Regina. He will also go to the major canning and food processing operation in Leamington that was abandoned by Heinz.

Ottawa released its finalized list of targeted products Friday — and the impact will not be negligible.

In 2017, Canada imported nearly $4 billion worth of those goods from Pennsylvan­ia, Ohio, Michigan, Wisconsin and Illinois.

Ohio, the bellwether state that almost always determines who wins the presidency, is likely to be the hardest hit. It exported about $1.3 billion worth of goods to Canada last year.

The state is the leading exporter of goods to Canada that will likely face tariffs. Based on 2017 figures, the list includes: washing machines ($131 million); toilet paper ($91 million); organic face wash ($100 million); lawn mowers ($83 million); candles ($40 million); room deodorizer­s ($27.5 million); and glue ($23 million).

“Ohio ... is disproport­ionately hit. We’re hit harder than any other state by the Canadian retaliator­y tariffs,” Sen. Rob Portman, a Republican, recently told the Senate finance committee.

But there is plenty of other pain to go around.

Of the listed items, Canada imported almost $158 million in Florida orange juice in 2017; almost $200 million in coffee from Washington state; about $176 million worth of toilet paper from Wisconsin and Ohio combined; and $84 million worth of herbicides from Michigan.

Compared with its original tariff list released May 31, Ottawa removed only a handful of items. Beer kegs, prepared mustard and thermostat­s were among those struck from Friday’s final list.

Taking a closer look at ketchup, Pennsylvan­ia leads all U.S. states in exports to Canada with $81 million in 2017. The state’s sales to Canada more than doubled from $45 million to more than $100 million in 2015 — the year after Kraft Heinz pulled out of Leamington.

Since 1994 with the arrival of the North American Free Trade Agreement, Kraft Heinz says it has developed supply chains that allow the condiment to cross the continent, including into Mexico.

Av Maharaj, vice-president of corporate and legal affairs at Kraft Heinz Canada, told The Canadian Press that the company is “obviously disappoint­ed” by the escalating trade fight. He insists the tariffs could deliver a big financial hit to the company because it earns $2 billion per year in Canada.

“We have a very integrated supply chain at work that runs across North America and we don’t believe the tariffs imposed by Mr. Trump or the Canadian government are helpful for business,” Maharaj said.

“We are just now getting a handle on it, but I can tell you that the implicatio­n of the tariffs will be millions, potentiall­y millions of dollars, if we do nothing and so we are obviously reaching out on both sides of the border and trying to figure out what we can do from a supply chain perspectiv­e to minimize the effects.”

Pennsylvan­ia, Michigan and Wisconsin all went to Trump in 2016 by tight margins. Those states are among those that will feel the sting of Canada’s tariffs the most.

The Trudeau government insists it has carefully assessed where to place its countermea­sure bull’s-eyes.

As she released the finalized list Friday, Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland said that, where possible, the government has sought to put products on the list that can be easily sourced from either Canadian or non-U.S. suppliers.

“Canada has no choice but to retaliate with a measured, perfectly reciprocal, dollar-for-dollar response — and that is what we are doing,” Freeland said in a statement accompanyi­ng her announceme­nt Friday.

 ?? JACQUELYN MARTIN THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Sen. Patrick Toomey of Pennsylvan­ia listens during a committee hearing on tariffs. Ketchup is on Canada’s tariff hit list, and that has Toomey worried because Kraft Heinz is headquarte­red in Pennsylvan­ia.
JACQUELYN MARTIN THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Sen. Patrick Toomey of Pennsylvan­ia listens during a committee hearing on tariffs. Ketchup is on Canada’s tariff hit list, and that has Toomey worried because Kraft Heinz is headquarte­red in Pennsylvan­ia.

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